Originally Posted by Zloth
So my character won't have to look REDICULOUS? Honestly, instead of messing with dyes, they should just let you pick whatever color you want for whatever piece you want whenever you want.

You have some kind of problem with combat leotard in manly shades of gray?

Originally Posted by Zloth
So my character won't have to look REDICULOUS? Honestly, instead of messing with dyes, they should just let you pick whatever color you want for whatever piece you want whenever you want.

P.S. Oh, Lucasarts is still being credited!

What? And waste the opportunity to sell you pixelated colors? have you forgotten this is EA?

The trend goes into more individualization of player characters.
But - this "trend" has imho always been there ("player housing"), only that gaming makers weren't interested in it.

-- “ Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius – and a lot of courage – to move in the opposite direction.“ (E.F.Schumacher, Economist, Source)

Originally Posted by Alrik Fassbauer
The trend goes into more individualization of player characters.
But - this "trend" has imho always been there ("player housing"), only that gaming makers weren't interested in it.

Player housing, dyes, etc have been in pretty much all MMOs pre-2004.

WoW success, that have none of those features, caused a BIG step back in term of individualization and customization. We are starting to see a come back: Wildstar housing system is crazy, ESO dev said that crafting allow for full customization of gear, EQNext want to be the biggest sandbox ever, etc.

SWTOR team is finally listening to its playerbase (pre-release request might I add), but they are charging money for it at the same time (sort of a turn off I think).

Thank you. I'm not familiar with MMORPGs in general; I only know 2 of them : SWTOR & DDO.

Now, what I *really* want is these features in an offline RPG …

-- “ Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius – and a lot of courage – to move in the opposite direction.“ (E.F.Schumacher, Economist, Source)